Celsius is superior to Fahrenheit and I’m tired of pretending this is a debate.
Celsius feels like temperature was designed by an human being who walks outside, feels the air, and says, “Yeah, that makes sense.”
Zero is freezing. 40 is brutally hot.
22 is comfortable. 25 is warm.
The numbers feel like what they are describing.
Fahrenheit feels like it was designed by a committee of people who hate joy and want every conversation about the weather to sound like a chemistry lab.
“It’s 70 degrees outside.”
What does that even mean to a normal person? Am I wearing shorts? Am I grabbing a jacket?
Nobody knows. You need a conversion chart and a government employee standing next to you explaining the vibes.
Celsius gives you range. That’s the point. It gives you more numbers for the temperatures human beings actually live in. You can feel the difference between 20, 22, 25, and 28. Those numbers matter. Celsius lets you describe the world with precision without having to use high numbers like a lunatic.
아 근데 진짜 할나 시리즈의 유구한
태어나길 물건으로 태어났고 그 외의 쓸모는 찾아본 적 없는 데다 불확실한 미래를 가진 것들을 인격체/생명체 취급을 할 수 있는가 > 아니그럼생명이아니겠냐? 모르겠고 일단 살아 ㅋㅋ 의 이게 참 좋고 웃긴듯
그들의 물건취급을 좋아하는 것과 별개로...
If you wanna do some fan MH designs in the future and maybe feel that you wanna grasp it's design decisions better and make them fitting for the game, I highly recommend this video, it goes over a lot of basics and some details of MH design in really nice collected way.
Another example:
When describing the ecosystems of MHWorld, I could treat large monsters and the maps as separate topics, with small mons/endemic life being pretty irrelevant.
In Wilds, you can NOT explain the Oilwell Basin without writing a full page on the Crudeshell Crab.
More art from Subnautica: Below Zero, in this case the little Pinnacarid.
The name was inspired by seals (Pinnipeds) and shrimp (Caridea), the latter taken from the name of Anomalocaris.